98 TAKE A JOURNEY INTO THE 17th CENTURY TO... WjIÙ<; &:J 7 Bermuda's newest luxury resort hotel stands among cannons and forts which date back to the 17th Century. Rooftop di ni ng overl 00 ki ng the ocean. Top international nightclu b entertainment. Beach, pools - Golf - tenn is - all at the hotel. Take a qu iet stroll through winding lanes to the 01 de Towne of S1. George - where history is over 300 years old. We offer you everything - the old - the new. Peace and luxury. RESE RV A TIONS Contact your Travel Agent or the Hol iday I nn reservations office REPRESENTED BY: HETLAND & STEVENS INC. fI I _ .' .', ì . .. ----- :'\. \-' ,\ \ _;i I_I - ilBERCROMBIE & FITCH '. ' " *.... , y".... .iJ:- ' o .\ ) f.". ... .;'<,. . x,> 'q,, .,;s '" LLL . -L '\...-\ '" the man's "tough" boot Our exclusive French import that costs just $15 for men Sure-footed and lightweight for working, hiking, walking, playing Thick rubber heel/ sale is deeply treaded and very flex- ible Bulk-free, pliable tops Terrific summer "work horse" of a shoe for the money! Mail orders accepted. Add 1.90 for first pair ordered 75c each additional pair to cover han- dling and shipping. We convert U.S. sizes to European sizes on the boot. ABERCROMBIE & FITCH, Madison Ave. at 45th st., New York. Chicago; San Francisco; Troy, Michigan; Colorado Springs; Bal Harbour and Palm Beach, Flonda. And, at The Mall, Short Hills, New Jersey 0 ;:;. , b g -è,)4 'J.J'ð ,. 4) ....) .... of plush visible of the new1) uphol- stered rocking chair, the gra) floor, and the gray shadow behind the white curtains where the shade is down. It i dark in that rOOll1: chair" dnd tables dark, even the gra} Roor; the curtlins below the shade on1) glowing d u1h . .I T HIS SUll1111er, in rel'lxation froll1 ll1Y histol ical and anthropological reading on the CIvil vVar and the In- d ians, J have fallen in to the habit of going to bed or all11.1sing n1yself at h rea k fa s t wi th th e n1cn1oirs of the literar} life of the Llte eighteen- hllndred (:lnd the ear- lv nineteen-hundreds -the period in which I suppose I an1 1110St at hOll1c. It rests 111(' and entertains ll1e: the vO]1l111es of Max Beer- boh n1 I have here, Shaw'" COI respondence with Ellen 'T CIT), Lione] Stevenson's hiography of l\1eredith, Edw(:trd Mdr h's "A N Ull1- ber of People," and Christopher Has- sdll's biograph) of Marsh. ThLse books by and about Marsh are delightful tin his so constantly telling anecdotes ll1ay becoll1e fatiguing: clear, well-bred Eng1ish style, background of classical studies, associations that cOll1bine the political nobility with the cultivated pro- fessional class, persona]it), good-hu- 111ored, con cientious, generous, great love of poetry and painting, the best of the life of the British upper classes in the period before the First "T al- good living, good stones, good jokes, endeanng eccentricities. Marsh had had a sel ious illness at the 111('111en t of ado- lescence, and on this 'Lccount neither his voice nor his sexual organs had ever ll1atured He never had to worry abou t love or a falnilr. " ...... - @ ......."', T HE Crostens were friends of 111ine froll1 Leland Stclnford, where he was head of the ll1usic depal tInent. rrhe day before they lcft, Septelnber ith, the) took us to the place the) had be n telling us about, where Sugar River, after going underground, gushes sud- denly out of the hillside. It is strange that I had never before known about this. I had a] ,^Ta) s assluned that the trickle that run down to the Black River was aU that was still flowing of the sunken water, but actuaH) the l11aIn streall1 turns sharply ea8t and runs for about a third of a mile cOll1pletely con- cealed under woodland. You pass an abandoned quarry and pick your wa) through a queer, broken-up terrain: JUNE 5, 1 9 7 1 great quare blocks of stone, like the bed of Dry Sugar River, with deep, straight-fissured creVIces between thell1, but here disguised by having been gl own-over, so thd t the crevices have grassy lips and from a distance look like a field. This forll1ation con tin ues through 1110re woodland, in the open places sprigged with everlastIng; lfter that, you COll1e to a clearing partly frall1ed by big 111aples, but lined on one side by a row of cottonwoods dif- fusIng a pleasant fragrance. Now ap- pears a great pit, froll1 which uses a kind of rock pyrall1id, ll1ade of more or less square-cut hlocks. ()ne cannot te]1 w h e the r this object is natu ral or erected by hUl11an h.:tnds, s0111ehow in con- nection WJth the quar- ry. Traversing this field to the left, you soon hear the roa r of the river. You find \ ourself (:It the top of a glen, at the botto111 of which the stred111 gushes out in what i .It first a s111aU torrent. But when YOll look down at it, the trees that grow out of the walls further along conceal it. You de cend by a kind of Right of wide stone steps that present thel11se]vec;; on the slope at intervals. On the left of a path are Llrge rocks speckled with h lack lichen; on the right, one finds a higher wall of ledges, with ru ty ferns grow- ing out at the b(:lse. L\.t the bottoll1, ) 01.1 stand at the edge of a streall1, but, on account of the bushes and trees (:lnd the livel) bends of the 1 iver, you still are unable to see-which n1akes it even l110re 111) steriol1s-exactl) where the Stl ean1 gushes out. You would have-- - as I once did-to wade up to the 111011 th of tht' cave. rro one side, in a little cove, there is a pool, brown and flecked with foa111. But the river is very dctive: it twists clnd turns, sprccHls out into a wider bed. It goes under a crude bridge, over which-as one can see, froll1 ala) er of thin dung-a herd of cattle passes. This bridge is propped up b) tl unks of sl11all trees, S0111C with the hark stiH on thel11; it has at one tU11e been faced with concrete, but has no rdiling, and the edge are gras"). ()ne can never see ahead where the stream i going, but eventuallv it runs into the 13Llck River. l .here are the ruins of an old stone Inill, which ]S rooResc;; lnd which one can cnter through d very low door like the entrance to an Egyptian tOll1h. Not tlr awa), sunk level with the ground, is a 111illstone of huge S17e, grooved fro111 its center with curving ra) s. 'r'hcre is , /